High contrast at short separation with VLTI/GRAVITY: Bringing Gaia companions to light
N. Pourr\'e, T.O. Winterhalder, J.-B. Le Bouquin, S. Lacour, A. Bidot,, M. Nowak, A.-L. Maire, D. Mouillet, C. Babusiaux, J. Woillez, R. Abuter, A., Amorim, R. Asensio-Torres, W.O. Balmer, M. Benisty, J.-P. Berger, H. Beust,, S. Blunt, A. Boccaletti, M. Bonnefoy, H. Bonnet

TL;DR
This paper enhances the VLTI/GRAVITY instrument's ability to detect faint companions at smaller separations by optimizing observing strategies and data reduction, enabling direct imaging of substellar objects closer to their host stars.
Contribution
It introduces a fiber off-pointing strategy and speckle modeling to lower the inner working angle of GRAVITY, validated through on-sky observations and synthetic companion injection tests.
Findings
Detection of companions down to contrast of 8×10^{-4} at 35 mas
Confirmed a substellar candidate around a Gaia star
Achieved detection limits consistent with theoretical expectations
Abstract
Since 2019, GRAVITY has provided direct observations of giant planets and brown dwarfs at separations of down to 95 mas from the host star. Some of these observations have provided the first direct confirmation of companions previously detected by indirect techniques (astrometry and radial velocities). We want to improve the observing strategy and data reduction in order to lower the inner working angle of GRAVITY in dual-field on-axis mode. We also want to determine the current limitations of the instrument when observing faint companions with separations in the 30-150 mas range. To improve the inner working angle, we propose a fiber off-pointing strategy during the observations to maximize the ratio of companion-light-to-star-light coupling in the science fiber. We also tested a lower-order model for speckles to decouple the companion light from the star light. We then evaluated the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · History and Developments in Astronomy
